chilly
Well-known member
- May 13, 2006
- 3,159
- 1,081
If all things are equal; e.g., sufficient clear coat thickness, availability of appropriate quality products (pads, abrasives, etc), skill level of the technician, etc, are all paints essentially capable of being brought to that state of "dripping wet gloss" that most folks hunger after, or are there paint/car brands or years or whatever where it's simply not possible to get more than a glow from the paint?
I am not talking about after applying a glaze or other "masking agent"
I am simply saying the last, finest, polishing/jeweling stage is done and the paint is simply bottomless
This is probably a simplistic question with a zillion variables but I am curious
I have read a lot on the subject of gloss including the very long writeup by Waxmode/Loach and it can get overwhelming but my takeaway from all this is the gloss you get following the last polishing step is the BEST you are going to get without resorting to artificial means
I don't mean to step on anyone's toes and to each his/her own but I know others on here feel that glazes and such are a crutch for substandard polishing
Thanks in advance
Michael
I am not talking about after applying a glaze or other "masking agent"
I am simply saying the last, finest, polishing/jeweling stage is done and the paint is simply bottomless
This is probably a simplistic question with a zillion variables but I am curious
I have read a lot on the subject of gloss including the very long writeup by Waxmode/Loach and it can get overwhelming but my takeaway from all this is the gloss you get following the last polishing step is the BEST you are going to get without resorting to artificial means
I don't mean to step on anyone's toes and to each his/her own but I know others on here feel that glazes and such are a crutch for substandard polishing
Thanks in advance
Michael